Alexis taught at
Macalester College,
DePaul University, the
University of Rochester, and both the economics department and the
Kellogg School of Management at
Northwestern University. He also served as dean of the business college of the
University of Illinois at Chicago. He was among the founders of the Caucus of Black Economists in 1969, now the
National Economic Association, and was the organization's first chair. He help to found the
American Economic Association's summer program to prepare promising students from underrepresented groups for graduate programs in economics. Alexis was also chair of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, and was a member of the
Interstate Commerce Commission for two years under President
Jimmy Carter, including serving as acting chair.
Selected works • Alexis, Marcus, and Charles Z. Wilson. "Organizational decision making." (1967). • Alexis, Marcus. "Some Negro-White differences in consumption." The American Journal of Economics and Sociology 21, no. 1 (1962): 11–28. • Haines Jr, George H., Leonard S. Simon, and Marcus Alexis. "Maximum likelihood estimation of central-city food trading areas." Journal of marketing research 9, no. 2 (1972): 154–159. • Alexis, Marcus. "A theory of labor market discrimination with interdependent utilities." The American Economic Review 63, no. 2 (1973): 296–302. • Alexis, Marcus. "Assessing 50 years of African-American economic status, 1940-1990." The American economic review 88, no. 2 (1998): 368–375. == References ==